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Chapter no 47

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue

There are a hundred kinds of silence.

Thereโ€™s the thick silence of places long sealed shut, and the muffled silence of ears stoppered up. The empty silence of the dead, and the heavy silence of the dying.

There is the hollow silence of a man who has stopped praying, and the airy silence of an empty synagogue, and the held-breath silence of someone hiding from themselves.

There is the awkward silence that fills the space between people who donโ€™t know what to say. And the taut silence that falls over those who do, but donโ€™t know where or how to start.

Henry doesnโ€™t know what kind of silence this is, but it is killing him.

He began to talk outside the corner shop, and kept talking as they walked, because it was easier for him to speak when he had somewhere to look besides her face. The words spilled out of him as they reached the blue door of his building, as they climbed the stairs, as they moved through the apartment, and now the truth fills the air between them, heavy as smoke, and Addie isnโ€™t saying anything.

She sits on the sofa, her chin in her hand.

Outside the window, the day just carries on as if nothingโ€™s changed, but it feels like everything has, because Addie LaRue is immortal, and Henry Strauss is damned.

โ€œAddie,โ€ he says, when he cannot stand it anymore. โ€œPlease say something.โ€

And she looks up at him, eyes shining, not with some spell, but tears, and he does not know at first if she is heartbroken or happy.

โ€œI couldnโ€™t understand,โ€ she says. โ€œNo one has ever remembered. I thought it was an accident. I thought it was a trap. But youโ€™re not an accident, Henry. Youโ€™re not a trap. You remember me because you made a deal.โ€ She shakes her head. โ€œThree hundred years spent trying to break this curse, and Luc did the one thing I never expected.โ€ She wipes the tears away, and breaks into a smile.

โ€œHe made aย mistake.โ€

There is such triumph in her eyes. But Henry doesnโ€™t understand. โ€œSo our deals cancel out? Is that why weโ€™re immune to them?โ€ Addie shakes her head. โ€œIโ€™m not immune, Henry.โ€

He cringes back, as if struck. โ€œBut my deal doesnโ€™t work on you.โ€

Addie softens, takes his hand. โ€œOf course it does. Your deal and mine, they nest like Russian dolls together in a shell. I look at you, and I seeย exactlyย what I want. Itโ€™s just that whatย Iย want has nothing to do with looks, or charm, or success. It would sound awful, in another life, but what I want mostโ€”what Iย needโ€”has nothing to do withย youย at all. What I want, what Iโ€™ve always truly wanted, is for someone to remember me. Thatโ€™s why you can say my name. Thatโ€™s why you can go away, and come back, and still know who I am. And thatโ€™s why I can look atย you,ย and see you as you are. And it is enough. It will always be enough.โ€

Enough. The word unravels between them, opening at his throat. It lets in so much air.

Enough.

He sinks onto the couch beside her. Her hand slides through his, their fingers knotting.

โ€œYou said you were born in 1691,โ€ he muses. โ€œThat makes youโ€ฆโ€ โ€œThree hundred and twenty-three,โ€ she says.

Henry whistles. โ€œIโ€™ve never been with an older woman.โ€ Addie laughs. โ€œYou do look very, very good for your age.โ€

โ€œWhy thank you.โ€

โ€œTell me about it,โ€ he says. โ€œAbout what?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know. Everything. Three hundred years is such a long time. You were there for wars and revolutions. You saw trains and cars and planes and televisions. You witnessedย historyย as it was happening.โ€

Addie frowns. โ€œI guess so,โ€ she says, โ€œbut I donโ€™t know; history is something you look back on, not something you really feel at the time. In the moment, youโ€™re just โ€ฆ living. I didnโ€™t want to live forever. I just wanted toย live.โ€

She curls into him, and they lie, heads together on the couch, intertwined like lovers in a fable, and a new silence settles over them, light as a summer sheet.

And then she says, โ€œHow long?โ€ His head rolls toward her. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œWhen you made your deal,โ€ she says, voice careful and light, a foot testing icy ground. โ€œHow long did you make it for?โ€

Henry hesitates, and looks up at the ceiling instead of her.

โ€œA lifetime,โ€ he says, and it is not a lie, but a shadow crosses Addieโ€™s face.

โ€œAnd he agreed?โ€

Henry nods, and pulls her back against him, exhausted by everything heโ€™s said, and everything he hasnโ€™t.

โ€œA lifetime,โ€ she whispers.

The words hang between them in the dark.

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